Architecture for Housing
Understanding the value of design through 14 case studies
Djordje StojanovićBirkhäuser
Basel
Foreword
Architecture versus Housing If the System Is Broken, Design a New System
Alan Pert
Introduction
Housing Research and Architecture A Closer Look from Far Away Overview
1 Infill Form
New Housing on Briesestraße, Berlin EM2N
2 Amalgam
Buildings R and S in Pierre Loti Residential Area, Aytré Guinée*Potin with Alterlab Architects
3 Homogenous Heterogeneous Wildgarten / Sonnenblumenhäuser, Vienna arenas basabe palacios arquitectos with M&S Architekten / Buschina & Partner
4 Hollow Square
Iroko Housing, London Haworth Tompkins
5 The Building and the City
La Vecindad Plaza Mafalda, Buenos Aires adamo-faiden
6 Repurposing Wohnregal, Berlin FAR frohn&rojas
7 Adaptability 6 × 6 Block, Girona bosch.capdeferro arquitectura
Determined and Undetermined
Residential Building in Straßgang, Graz Riegler Riewe Architects
9 Between Buildings
Social Housing in Granadero Baigorria, Rosario BBOA – Balparda Brunel Oficina de Arquitectura
10 Joint Domestic Spaces
San Riemo, Munich Summacumfemmer and Büro Juliane Greb
11 Flowing Noodles
Yokohama Apartment, Yokohama ON design partners
12 Rotation R50, Berlin ifau und Jesko Fezer, Heide & von Beckerath
13 Community Infrastructure
La Borda, Barcelona Lacol
14 Rooms
85 Social Dwellings in Cornellà, Barcelona Peris+Toral Arquitectes
Architecture versus Housing
If the System Is Broken, Design a New System
Alan PertAs the origins of this book stem from a series of talks hosted by the Melbourne School of Design (MSD) over the last few years, I will reflect on Melbourne’s contested public housing context and the debates that have run in parallel to the presentation of the fourteen case studies. Although not featured through a selected architectural case study, Melbourne becomes the twelfth city, and the fourteen case studies become important repositories of knowledge for where Melbourne’s housing futures might lie.
The first case study was presented in August 2020, and in November 2020 Richard Wynne, then Victoria’s Planning and Housing minister, announced the $5.4 billion “Big Housing Build,” with the aim to create more than 12,000 homes in four years. Of these, 9,300 were estimated to be social housing. Fast-forward three years, and more than 7,600 homes have been completed or are under way, and more than 1,700 households have either moved into or are getting ready to move into new homes.
For an architectural profession that only ten years ago had no submissions in the multiresidential category at the annual Australian Institute of Architects National Architecture Awards, we are now seeing a fundamental shift in attitudes and alternative models being championed beyond the narrow confines of our current housing system. The Nightingale model and Assemble Communities represent two obvious additions to any case study repository—like the selected case studies in this book, they have turned our attention to the role of architecture and architects and how they navigate the system and recast new possibilities for how the built environment can better answer fundamental questions about how we might live.
Within a short few months of the last case study’s being presented at MSD in April 2023, Victoria’s outgoing Premier, Daniel Andrews, announced details of the state’s long-awaited housing statement. On Wednesday, September 20, 2023, he made a commitment to deliver 80,000 new homes every year for the next 10 years; in addition, the government pledged to speed up approval times for developers who agree to deliver social and affordable homes. Government surplus land would be rezoned at 45 sites across the state with an expectation to deliver at least 9,000 new homes. Planning processes would also be streamlined for significant housing developments, worth at least $50 million in Melbourne and $15 million in regional Victoria, if they delivered at least 10 percent affordable housing, including build-to-rent projects. The Property Council of Australia also identified nearly 80 office buildings that are underused, and the government committed to working with them to convert these into residential and mixed-use properties, creating up to 12,000 homes.
Premier Andrews said the statement was the most significant shake-up of housing policy in decades, but the fallout from the announcement was the plan to demolish Melbourne’s 44 landmark public housing towers that were built in the middle of the last century. The statement suggested they would be knocked down and redeveloped within three decades. Home to some 10,000 people, the plan is to tear them down and replace them over three decades with higher-density developments in a public-private partnership. These are the most visible legacy of the Housing Commission of Victoria and the Commonwealth Government’s Nation-Building program, which provided tens of thousands of houses and flats in Melbourne and many country towns between the late 1940s and the early 1970s, providing low-rent housing for low-income families. All built using the same precast concrete panel technology, these public housing estates remain a powerful symbol of the social, racial, and architectural tensions that have dogged our cities since the mid-twentieth century.
Two days after the release of the Victorian government’s housing statement, researchers from Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology’s Centre for Urban Research released a statement arguing that the government had failed to justify its claim that the towers were no longer fit for purpose. Researchers from the University of Melbourne and key voices from the architectural community pointed to numerous case studies from around the world that have turned to “retrofit first.” Take, for example, the Tower Blocks Project, a UK Heritage Lottery–funded initiative which ran from Edinburgh College of Art between 2014 and 2019, completing on October 31, 2019. The project emphasized the social and architectural importance of tower blocks and framed multistory social housing as a coherent and accessible nationwide heritage: “As multistory blocks increasingly vanish from our horizons, this project answered to the need to document and create an engagement with the history of multistory social housing at a local and national level.” In reevaluating the historical, architectural, and social importance of high-rise living, the Tower Blocks Project aimed to provide a forum for the sharing of images, experiences, and memories. By providing a searchable image archive in tandem with various public engagement activities, the project has brought together both tangible and intangible sources for thinking about recent social history. In other words, in response to these widespread demolitions, we are also seeing a countermovement emerge which attempts to banish the negative assumptions surrounding life in multistory social housing.
The troubled existence of these estates around the world are reflective of the complexity and contradictions of the housing system in each nation. For example, a comparative study of social housing programs across the globe would suggest that they vary
substantially—in their histories of origin, who they serve, where housing is located, the means of financing new housing, and even how their housing subsidies work. What is similar though is the generic architectural forms. The physical nature of the housing stock seen in the images of Flemington and North Melbourne circulating across media platforms could have been from Chicago, Glasgow (a quarter of Glasgow’s high-rises have been demolished in less than ten years), London, Paris, Toronto, or any number of Eastern European cities that adopted the tower as a way of replacing postwar inner-city slums.
Martin Pawley’s 1971 publication, Architecture versus Housing, explained that housing is a system—it is an assemblage of different actors, financial imperatives, policy goals, social conditions, architectural ideologies, planning legislation, and construction costs—in the postwar period it also had a lot to do with population growth, car ownership, a rejection of the medieval city, and an optimism for all things future-oriented! Fifty years on, the system is well and truly broken. We seem to have lost our way in the production of the built environment— our cities and suburbs are built for profit, not for people, and we have a crisis of affordability. The market for new housing is dominated by freestanding tracts on the fringes and real estate extrusions in the city. There are limited alternatives or innovative models available on the market.
“Modern architecture’s social mission—the effort to establish a decent standard of living for all—seems a thing of the past. Architecture is now a tool of capital, complicit in a purpose antithetical to its erstwhile ideological endeavor.” Quote Reinier de Graaf, Architectural Review, April 24, 2015
March 2022 marked the fiftieth anniversary of the demolition of Pruitt-Igoe. The architectural historian Charles Jencks once cited this televised demolition as the moment “modern architecture died.” The racially segregated, middle-class complex of thirty-three, eleven-storey towers opened to great fanfare on the north side of St. Louis between 1954 and 1956. But within a decade, it would become a decrepit warehouse exclusively inhabited by poor, Black residents. Within two decades, it would undergo complete demolition. Pruitt-Igoe’s obsolescence would trigger a wave of similar spectator sport demolitions across the globe, prompted by many public housing estates’ failing to address the social and individual needs of the occupants, with disastrous results. Whether you call Pruitt-Igoe’s short, troubled existence a failure of architecture, a failure of policy, or a failure of society, its fate remains bound up with, and reflective of, the fate of many cities in the mid-twentieth century.
After fifty years of inaction in Victoria, the need to reframe priorities across the board in funding, procurement, design, and delivery of social and affordable housing could finally be getting the urgent attention it deserves, and this book is a timely addition to the debates about the intersection of spatial intelligence (architecture) and interdisciplinary research (housing). As Djordje Stojanović suggests in his introduction to this book, housing manifests an incredible complexity of issues, touching on social, economic, political, aesthetic, and urban questions. As such it is no surprise that the Victorian government’s announcement has provoked a lot of reaction. The announcement of a renewed focus on affordability, the recent creation of Homes Victoria and the Big Housing Build all give us hope and a great deal of optimism for new architectural and spatial solutions.
There is now an opportunity to implement a progressive social agenda that redefines housing from a consumer product to an important public infrastructure, with a human touch. Affordable housing has been the problem child perpetually tugging at the sleeve of Housing Ministers, Premiers, and now the Prime Minister since he recently took office. Recent announcements are as much about creating jobs as they are about tackling the corrosive effects of social inequality, but the optimist in all of us welcomes the opportunity to recalibrate Melbourne’s chronic housing crisis. While the shortfall in numbers has to be a priority, it cannot be simply a numbers game; it has to be a sociospatial agenda that is about quality and community.
As architect Neave Brown once said about housing, “We have to face it as a social problem, not as an economic problem for neoliberalism to make money out of. And if we go on doing that, we are going into a future of catastrophe with our eyes wide open.” We also have to move away from a fixation on traditional family stereotypes and begin to consider the complexity of lifestyle choices in the future. The realities of life have changed. Quality of life is so much more than minimum standards and square meters. Residential buildings constructed in the 1950s and 1960s were almost exclusively conceived for small families, while models of living together are more diverse nowadays. Take Denmark for instance, where there are currently 37 different types of families registered by the government: An ever-growing group of one-person households, flat-sharing communities, life partnerships, and communities with and without children from current and previous relationships, long-distance and weekend relationships, and many other ways of living have emerged. The nuclear family made up of parents and their children is only one model out of many. This alone calls for rethinking how we design housing. This calls for radical changes in the way we build and live, considering aspects of geography, identity, demography, and local communities.
In a postpandemic context, work, leisure, and education are also increasingly merging with housing. Spatial separation by functional categories are being replaced by “living” as a whole. The world of work is no longer dictated by the 9-to-5 patterns of behavior. Working in a home office has become normalized, and the digital age has altered our lives and opened up new flexible opportunities, where boundaries are difficult to fix. Leisure and work are spatially exchangeable. Housing for too long has been defined by static ideas about rooms (one, two, and three bedrooms) and by standards, rules, and programs. The results are house types that have remained unchanged and unchallenged for many years.
Maybe Homes Victoria and the government’s new agenda could adopt the principle of IBA Vienna 2016–2022, which states that “each and every Viennese resident is to be able to benefit from the fundamental right to an affordable home; with a view to successfully living in the community, manifold and suitable measures are to be developed to enable different population groups to participate; and nobody should be able to guess a person’s social status or income level based on their home address.” In a nutshell, the focus is on the dignity and security of people and the health of Vienna’s citizens. IBA Vienna recognizes that each social need which receives no answer creates a health problem, and each health problem which remains without an appropriate answer creates a social problem.
With a new political environment, there is now an opportunity to drive and implement a progressive social agenda for housing in Victoria. With the new agency, we can redefine standards, finances, occupation, land use, acquisition, and so much more. By adopting the model of an International Building Exhibition (IBA) we have the opportunity to consider our 12,000 new homes as part of a particular instrument of urban development. IBAs serve as spaces for experimentation, as urban development labs, and as prototypes for new ways of living. IBAs should be understood as temporary laboratories, as areas of both spatial and intellectual experimentation which would seem critical for Homes Victoria, whose objective it is to generate internationally effective contributions to new social housing. We need to avoid pursuing a course of business as usual so that we will not one day find ourselves faced yet again with the ruins of social housing and the spectacle of demolishing estates.
Prof. Alan Pert is Deputy
Deanof the Faculty of Architecture Building & Planning at the University of Melbourne, Chair of IBA Melbourne, and Research Director of The Hallmark Research Initiative for Affordable Housing.
The Economic Viability
The use of the antonyms determined and undetermined is borrowed from the slightly different title of Roger Riewe’s recent lecture hosted by the Melbourne School of Design to start the discussion of shared decision-making between architects and inhabitants of multiunit residential buildings.¹³ The lecture revisited some of the earlier work of Riegler Riewe Architects, including the multiunit residential building in Graz presented in this book. At the conceptual level, this affordable housing project differentiates between determined elements such as building structure and services and undetermined spaces. For the latter, inhabitants have been given a choice on how to use them and an opportunity to assert control. Although the reader will learn more from the chapter dedicated to this project, it is essential to clarify that by undetermined, Riegler Riewe do not imply empty but rather carefully planned and structured spaces to allow multiple uses and modifications by occupants. Such a design approach can be traced back to John Habraken’s influential book Supports: An Alternative to Mass Housing, written in the 1960s with the proposition that residential buildings should be conceptualized and built as “supports” that allow inhabitants to take control of the infill or their “own immediate environment.”¹⁴ Today, the proposition is well understood by many architects and is finding practical application in myriad ways. To corroborate, several practitioners interviewed in this book have related their work or referred back to Supports, and most of the presented projects, in their own ways, address the balance between empowering residents and the architectural definition of the project. The distribution of design control and an understanding of housing as an activity whereby residents make contributions toward creating the built environment come from two of John Turner’s books from the 1970s, Freedom to Build: Dweller Control of the Housing Process and Housing by People: Towards Autonomy in Building Environments, which are also referenced by serval architects in the discussions on their work.¹⁵,¹⁶ The positivism about self-help or self-organized housing provision prevails through some of the following case studies, as it increasingly does in many other current research-related debates on housing. Still, the book
13. Roger Riewe, “determined / non-determined,” guest lecture, Melbourne School of Design, March 14, 2023, https://msd.unimelb.edu. au/events/determinednon-determined.
14. John N. Habraken, Supports: An Alternative to Mass Housing (London: Architectural Press, 1972).
15. John F. C. Turner, Housing by People: Towards Autonomy in Building Environments (New York: Pantheon Books, 1976).
16. John F. C. Turner and Robert Fichter, Freedom to Build: Dweller Control of the Housing Process (New York: MacMillan, 1972).
17. Tatjana Schneider and Jeremy Till, Flexible Housing (London: Architectural Press, 2007).
18. Schneider and Till, Flexible Housing.
19. Christina Gamboa, “Infrastructures for Sustainable Living: Modes of Housing,” guest lecture, Melbourne School of Design, August 26, 2020, https://edsc.unimelb.edu. au/studio-epsilon/lecturerepository/lacol.
20 Colin Ward, Preface to Turner, Housing by People.
explores a range of housing models. The discussion focuses on the value of architectural design and explores contemporary architectural practice in relation to seminal ideas originating more than half a century ago. It includes differentiation between determined and undetermined in an architectural project. It is observed as central or equivalent to spatial flexibility and adaptability, accepting the architectural difference between the two notions.¹⁷
An appreciation of the resident-centered approach is characteristic of all presented projects. In some, the emphasis is placed on spatial adaptability in the dwelling layout, enabling residents to use the space in multiple ways according to their individual and changing needs, with or without physical modification. In other projects, it is about incorporating input from the resident community during the design process. As the case studies show, the embedded spatial adaptability and collaborative or participatory design require that at least some parts or aspects of an architectural project are not determined by architects but are left undetermined to allow residents to assert control. The potential advantages observed in the selected projects were twofold. First, the indeterminacy suggests improved economic viability. If residential buildings are not flexible and cannot adapt to occupants’ needs, they become redundant.¹⁸ Second, as brought forward in the lecture by Cristina Gamboa Masdevall from Colin Word’s preface to John Turner’s book, “when residents make their own contribution to the design, construction, or management of their housing, both the process and environment stimulate individual and social well-being.” ¹⁹, ²⁰
The residents’ contribution to the design process is most relevant for the projects developed by housing cooperatives La Borda, Kooperative Großstadt, and Iroko, as well as a self-organized building group (not a cooperative), R50. These four projects in particular have required developing an art of planning between determined and undetermined, adding complexity to architectural design. Conversations with architects involved with these projects reveal their efforts to work collaboratively with resident communities, requiring agency, additional hours, and commitments not foreseen in the traditional scope of work. The successes of these projects depended on architects’ capability to work closely with the inhabitants and their skill to deliver innovative design solutions accommodating communal and individual needs on tight construction budgets. It may be important to emphasize that these projects are internationally acclaimed for their architectural outcomes, which is still relatively rare with self-organized housing undertakings.
The book recognizes the value added by architectural design and does not advocate developing and planning a multiunit residential project without adequate knowledge and professional support, which
can be the case with self-organized housing provision and participatory design processes. It is not uncommon for housing communities to try to drive projects with little professional input, resulting in inadequate architectural outcomes. Recent research on housing identifies the potential adverse effects of closed residential communities on the larger socio-spatial development. The exclusivity of some communities is associated with development costs, ownership rights, and other less apparent aspects.²¹, ²²
The book also explores the tools and mechanisms used to bring together architectural practices and self-organized housing provision. For example, an architectural competition was used to select architects by two housing cooperatives, an invited competition was used for Iroko, and an open architectural competition for the San Riemo building. The conversation with Iain Tuckett of Coin Street Community Builders, the social enterprise behind the Iroko housing cooperative, reveals how they selected and worked with architects. They have decided to move away from the model based on extensive consultations but to engage with architects through local representatives during and after the competition, as they found in their previous projects that some of the decision-making could improve if better informed by professional knowledge.
Architectural design perspective on the spatial relationship between determined and undetermined in selected multiunit residential buildings includes comparisons and a discussion on the following topics.
Flexibility
Two of the selected projects incorporate negotiable boundaries between dwellings. While their load-bearing structures, building services, access spaces, and overall form are determined, they envisage and provide spatial mechanisms for changing boundaries between dwelling units so that they can expand or downsize. The dwellings of the building designed by Lacol are composed of modules called “basic dwelling configurations” and “satellite rooms.” The satellite rooms can be attached or detached from basic dwelling configurations and thus exchanged between different households. Structural walls, made of mass timber, contain concealed door-size openings to facilitate an exchange. Similar spatial flexibility is incorporated into the architectural project in Munich by Summacumfemmer and Büro Juliane Greb, where the housing cooperative behind the project was keen to have rooms that can be associated and dissociated with several individual dwellings and used interchangeably between households based on their needs. As both projects are based on rental tenure, it makes it easier to foresee how such spatial changes could be regulated and
21. Gutzon Larsen, “Three Phases of Danish Cohousing.”
22 Francesco Chiodelli and Valeria Baglione, “Living Together Privately: For a Cautious Reading of Cohousing,” Urban Research & Practice 7, no. 1 (2014): 20–34.
Figure 33 Wildgarten / Sonnenblumenhäuser
9
2
6 Wohnregal Apartments and Ateliers
5
11 Yokohama Apartment
8
negotiated between residents. In the first instance, the change of unit boundaries requires physical modification, while in the second, it is facilitated simply by opening or closing double doors. Spatial flexibility is also achieved in other ways. As mentioned earlier, some of the dwellings of the San Riemo building have access to shared living rooms, and most of the dwellings in the building in Berlin by EM2N can utilize access galleries as their outdoor areas. Such an expansion of private dwellings into shared spaces may be linked to the spatial relationship between determined and undetermined and observed as a form of spatial flexibility.
Adaptability
The use of individual rooms within dwellings is undetermined in architectural projects in Barcelona by Peris+Toral; in Munich by Summacumfemmer and Büro Juliane Greb; and in Girona by bosch. capdeferro. The building structure, dwelling boundaries, services, and access spaces are all determined. However, dwelling layouts are
Figure 4conceptualized as composites of identical rooms. The three projects provide alternatives to the conventional dwelling typologies based on a hierarchy of room sizing according to their use. Instead, rooms were made larger than prescribed by minimal building standards to allow multiple options in the first two named projects. In contrast, rooms in the project by bosch.capdeferro are as small as building regulations allow for rooms to be deemed habitable, but a pair of rooms can be connected with large sliding doors so that they can merge into one space. The conversations with residents from buildings in Girona and Barcelona provide insights into how the designed adaptability works in real life and capture their appreciation of the given freedom.
Connectivity
The discussion on the relationship between determined and undetermined with architects and residents of several projects has also gravitated toward sequencing spaces in the unit layout and the connectivity between them. In the dwelling layout by bosch.capdeferro in Girona, each room has three doorways. Such connectivity allows the same unit plan to meet diverse needs, accommodate different-sized households, and respond to diversified lifestyles. As outlined above, two small rooms can combine when the sliding doors are tucked in. The use of sliding doors in this project allows residents to convert their dwelling layout into an open plan configuration. Similarly, connectivity achieved in dwellings in Cornellà by Peris+Toral permits longitudinal views from one facade to the other, which makes them spacious and enables better daylighting and natural ventilation. The configuration of dwellings in Graz designed by Riegler Riewe employs similar principles. The three projects strategically use different door types, including sliding, folding, and pivoting single or double doors, to establish connectivity between spaces within dwellings. For example, folding doors employed in the building in Graz and in the R50 building also serve as subtle dividers between spaces even when they are open. In the San Riemo building, emphasis is placed on the use of double doors: when they are open, they combine two rooms rather than just open a passage from one room to another.
Architectural Definition and Residents’ Contribution
Not all presented buildings were completed before the dwellings were handed over to residents. That, too, has to do with how much is determined by architects and what depends on residents’ contribution, either as a way of asserting control over their dwelling space or a necessity born out of cost savings and, therefore, related to the economic viability of projects. At the conceptual level, it is captured in the
title of Anne Femmer’s lecture “non-finito,” which included the presentation of their design for the San Riemo building.²³ The conversation with Jesko Fezer about the collaborative design strategy for the R50 building in Berlin reveals that the group was able to postpone some decision-making but to progress with the design and construction when consensus was not reached or funding was not agreed upon. Construction work on the building for the La Borda housing cooperative was planned in two stages. The building was handed over to residents as the first phase was complete, and minimal regulatory requirements were met to allow people to move in. Residents have then continued working on the fittings and finishes of their dwellings. The communal areas were also incrementally completed. The conversation with Lacol Architects highlights the benefits but also challenges faced by residents and how that has informed their approach to other ongoing projects. A separate discussion with Marc Frohn about the building in Berlin designed by FAR frohn&rojas addresses construction methods. He explains how a strategic differentiation of construction works and building elements or layers according to their life spans in their project allowed more flexibility in conceptualizing the building, including planning unit layouts. The reliance on cost-effective building materials and finishes is explored in conversations with other architects and residents.
Economic Viability
The case studies provide insights into how the architectural significance of the determined and undetermined can be relevant to research efforts probing into the economic viability of housing. The presented comparisons and established overlaps between projects suggest that spatial flexibility, adaptability, connectivity in dwelling layouts, residents’ involvement with aspects of the building construction, and careful planning of the construction works can be valuable in lowering the construction cost and helping residential buildings stay purposeful for longer.
23 Anne Femmer, “non-finito,” guest lecture, Melbourne School of Design, August 17, 2022, https://edsc.unimelb. edu.au/studio-epsilon/ lecture-repository/summa cumfemmer.
24 Milica Vujovic, Djordje Stojanovic, Tina Salemi, and Michael Hensel, “Design and Science: Content Analysis of Published Peer-Reviewed Research over the Last Four Decades,” Frontiers of Architectural Research 12, no. 3 (2023): 613–29, https://doi.org/10.1016/ j.foar.2023.04.001.
The Environmental Viability
The relationship between interior and exterior in architectural projects for multiunit residential buildings can be complex, and in this book, it is observed as significant to their environmental impact. It is important to clarify that the presented buildings are designed for different climates, allowing a varied continuum between indoor and outdoor domestic activities. It makes some comparisons difficult but also creates a good platform for discussing architectural design decision-making instead of design standards. The presented case studies show the relationship between the interior and exterior concerns various aspects, such as the provision of private outdoor areas, positioning and orientation of buildings, architectural treatment of the building envelope, and microclimate control. Related design decisions significantly impact residents’ health and well-being, indoor environment quality and thermal comfort in dwellings, and overall energy consumption. A growing body of research in building physics is probing these and related topics. At the same time, there is, and should be, an increasing awareness of the embodied and operational carbon footprint in the building construction industry. However, the emphasis of this book’s discussion is not on meeting the relevant building industry standards but on architectural practice and project-specific decision-making on the relationship between the building and the environment. It is partly done concerning carbon-neutral building and scientific knowledge originating outside the discipline of architecture, similar to how the relationship between individual and communal is addressed in the interdisciplinary research on housing. The growing body of research in leading peerreviewed journals such as Building and Environment, Architectural Science Review, Energy and Buildings, Journal of Building Physics, and Applied Thermal Engineering addresses the environmental impact, thermal comfort, and the efficiency of energy consumption in residential buildings. Yet research undertaken in the building science domain does not often incorporate architectural design knowledge.²⁴ The related discussion presented in this book aims to highlight aspects of architectural practice that could benefit from closer links and integration with scientific methods relevant to the environmental viability of multiunit residential buildings.
Private Outdoor Areas
Access to backyards or gardens is commonly associated with an image of an individual house, a building typology characteristic of suburban areas. In contrast, the significance of private outdoor areas is often overlooked in planning multiunit residential buildings. When designing high-density residential structures, architects often face challenges in finding room for outdoor amenities and in balancing demands for privacy with the provision of outdoor access. In the discussion on the R50 building, Verena von Beckerath addresses the specific nature of private outdoor areas in multiunit residential buildings and their role as an extension of the dwelling interior rather than an autonomous feature. In the R50 building, a balcony-like steel grate floor forming the building’s circumference, 100 meters long and less than a meter wide, is shared by three dwellings on each floor. In the building designed by EM2N, dwellings have a small private outdoor area facing the street and a right-to-use larger outdoor area that is part of the communal access gallery facing the courtyard. Significances of the continuum between communal and individual and the value of spatial adaptability allowing units to expand into communal areas in this project have already been identified. However, the structuring of the relationship between the interior and exterior is equally important, as it enables access to an outdoor environment directly from the individual units. Different design decisions are made to achieve similar objectives in other projects. For example, access from dwellings to the outdoor environment was one of the main drivers of the overall architectural definition of the project in Buenos Aires by adamo-faiden. The building comprises two rows of duplex units, placed one over the other, so the lower row units have access to back gardens, while the upper row dwellings have roof terraces.
Positioning and Orientation of Buildings
In the projects in Vienna by arenas basabe palacios and in Aytré by Guinée*Potin, the relationship between the buildings and the landscape is central to the design intent. In both projects, ground-floor units have private gardens next to the openly accessible landscape. The two named projects are good examples of the positioning and orientation of residential structures, essential for the intake of daylight and natural ventilation. In Vienna, the entire master plan for 1,000 dwellings is developed systemically following simple rules to ensure dwellings and outdoor communal areas have adequate southern exposure.
Indoor Environmental Quality, Thermal Comfort, and Microclimate Control
The building in Girona designed by bosch.capdeferro exploits southern exposure in its own way. It utilizes private winter gardens to preheat air, which is then distributed throughout the dwellings to reduce reliance on mechanical heating systems. The project is centered around microclimate control and creating breeze paths to improve thermal comfort and indoor air quality with minimal energy consumption. The courtyard of the building owned by housing cooperative La Borda performs similarly. In winter, it captures air that is heated by the sun. In summer, it opens to create a breeze and draw air from the north to help cool the building. An interview with one of the residents revealed that thermal comfort in the dwellings, along with the low energy bills, is one of the most loved qualities of that building.
In all fourteen projects, most dwellings are dually oriented to ensure natural cross ventilation and reduce reliance on energy-consuming environmental systems. The intent to achieve good indoor environmental quality but avoid costly technology for controlling air temperature and humidity comes across most clearly through the conversation with Ramon Bosch. He explains what architectural means and decisions have improved thermal comfort in the building and how creating different microclimates along the two main building facades benefits residents at other times of the year.
Building Envelopes
The architectural treatment of the building envelope is one of the topics discussed in relation to most projects. The associated design challenges are establishing an interface between the interior and exterior and creating an architectural expression of the building as its contribution to the surrounding environment. This is clearly articulated in the project by adamo-faiden, where the facade of a privately developed residential building creates a backdrop for a public square, and vegetation in the private gardens enlarges the city’s green fund. This project, as well as the projects by bosch.capdeferro and Peris+Toral, exemplifies architectural strategies for making complex and layered facades, which help regulate indoor environmental conditions and protect the intimacy of dwellings. The three named projects incorporate inhabitable open-air space within the building envelope and use architectural means to create microclimates with air temperatures significantly lower than the surrounding environment in the summer. More information is available from the interview with Marcelo Faiden as part of the chapter on the project in Buenos Aires. The presented conversation addresses the knowledge transfer between their projects, a series of completed multiunit residential buildings incorporating
gardens between the inner and outer layers of the facade as a seamless extension of dwellings, and a transition between inside and outside.
Rollable sunshades employed in projects in Girona and Barcelona and sliding screens of the building in Graz designed by Riegler Riewe provide protection from overheating. Still, they are also central to how the building is perceived from the exterior. These devices are operated by residents individually and manually. They are used in response to the same environmental conditions but according to diverse personal needs. As there is only a remote chance of these devices ever being aligned, their application contributes to the architectural expression by rendering the building’s image dynamic and compound. It contrasts the uniformity imposed by the rationalized construction methods and the standardization often associated with multiunit residential buildings. The design challenge of overcoming the impersonal and monotonous image of multiunit residential buildings comes across most clearly in discussion with BBOA, who explain the fenestration strategy of their project in Granadero Baigorria. The project was part of a government-led initiative to provide affordable housing. The objective to lower the construction cost of seven buildings imposed many restrictions, including that all windows would be of the same dimensions. In an interview, Fernando Brunel and Tomás Balparda explain how they worked with the builders to make window frames not only the same but also out of a single aluminum bar to minimize material waste. However, they also explain a stream of design decisions concerning the individual dwelling layouts and grouping of units into clusters to offset the limitations imposed by the use of a single window dimension to achieve a specific architectural expression.
Not Fully Enclosed and Thermally Insulated Spaces
Thermal requirements can be different for shared spaces and dwellings. In several selected projects, communal spaces are not fully enclosed nor thermally insulated. Moreover, from the architectural point of view, they are neither entirely interior nor exterior. For example, the building in Yokohama includes a shared living room on the building’s ground floor, equipped with a rarely used floor heating system. At the same time, with its large openings, this space doubles as an outdoor environment. The openness is deliberate in making this space more visible and accessible to the public, as the building is designed for an artist working and showcasing their work there while using it daily for domestic activities. Similarly, staircases turned into shared spaces and extensions of dwellings in the project in Granadero Baigorria designed by BBOA are treated as outdoor environments while they are inside the building volume. Not fully enclosing spaces and omitting
thermal insulation, windows, and doors in these and other projects was driven by cost savings. The rationale for designing communal spaces to a level of thermal comfort different from what is achieved in dwellings is that these spaces are used less frequently, for shorter periods, and for activities that require lower temperatures. The conversations with architects and residents of projects in Berlin, Munich, Vienna, and Barcelona provide more information on how such spaces are designed and used.
Environmental Impact of Building Materials
The decision-making on the selection of building materials, including considering environmental impact and embodied carbon footprint, was part of the discussion for most projects. Projects in Barcelona, Girona, and Yokohama have employed timber for the primary structure. Mass timber construction was considered but dropped in several other projects because of the associated cost. In addition, restrictions
Figure 5imposed by the building regulations have been identified as one of the main hurdles for the broader use of timber and other regenerative materials in the construction of multiunit residential buildings. In the conversation about the project in Aytré, Hervé Potin also recognizes a shortage of building construction companies and workforce with knowledge and interest in working with regenerative building materials and vernacular construction techniques. In separate conversations with José Toral and Ramon Bosch, we explore the benefits and challenges of using wood and making structural walls and slabs of crosslaminated timber visible in the building interior. In addition to the choice of building materials in some of the chapters, the discussion focuses on the choice of construction methods in relation to their environmental impact. For example, the residential building in Berlin by FAR frohn&rojas employs prefabricated concrete construction and uses solutions tested and developed for industrial buildings.
Environmental Viability
The presented overview identifies overlaps and common threads between the selected projects in the provision of private outdoor areas, positioning and orientation of buildings, microclimate control, treatment of the building envelope, and the use of building materials and construction methods with an awareness of the associated carbon emissions. The design decisions concerning the listed aspects of selected projects are primarily driven by environmental implications, which are also addressed by the growing volume of research in building physics. The following chapters present design knowledge developed in architectural practice that can be useful to scientific and research-oriented undertakings in addition to architectural practice. The case studies aim to identify and explicate architectural design decisions impacting the environmental viability of multiunit residential buildings and to show how they correspond with other design objectives, such as social and economic.
The complexity of design decisions consistently referred to in this overview is in balancing different objectives: social, economic, and environmental. The following chapters will help better understand such a balancing act through greater detail while focusing on spatial antonyms: the individual and communal, the interior and exterior, and the determined and undetermined.
1 Infill Form
New Housing on Briesestraße, Berlin EM2N
2 Amalgam Buildings R and S in Pierre Loti Residential Area, Aytré Guinée*Potin with Alterlab Architects
3 Homogenous Heterogeneous Wildgarten / Sonnenblumenhäuser, Vienna arenas basabe palacios arquitectos with M&S Architekten / Buschina & Partner
4 Hollow Square Iroko Housing, London Haworth Tompkins
5 The Building and the City La Vecindad Plaza Mafalda, Buenos Aires adamo-faiden
6 Repurposing Wohnregal, Berlin FAR frohn&rojas
7 Adaptability 6 × 6 Block, Girona bosch.capdeferro arquitectura
8 Determined and Undetermined
Residential Building in Straßgang, Graz Riegler Riewe Architects
9 Between Buildings
Social Housing in Granadero Baigorria, Rosario BBOA – Balparda Brunel Oficina de Arquitectura
10 Joint Domestic Spaces San Riemo, Munich Summacumfemmer and Büro Juliane Greb
11 Flowing Noodles Yokohama Apartment, Yokohama ON design partners
12 Rotation R50, Berlin ifau und Jesko Fezer, Heide & von Beckerath
13 Community Infrastructure La Borda, Barcelona Lacol
14 Rooms 85 Social Dwellings in Cornellà, Barcelona Peris+Toral Arquitectes
New Housing on Briesestraße, Berlin
New Housing on Briesestraße, Berlin
EM2N
Year of completion: 2020
Number of units: 101
This project delivers affordable housing on an underutilized site in the inner city. It carefully structures outdoor spaces to improve the broader neighborhood, employs access galleries as extensions of individual dwellings, and facilitates interaction between residents.
Background
The project for New Housing on Briesestraße in Berlin was initiated through the ideas workshop New Forms of Urban Living, organized by the Berlin Senate Department of Urban Development and Environment in 2013, seeking new and experimental solutions for housing in the context of the city’s eight nominated districts. The initiative opened the debate about inner-city densification through affordable and innovative housing development. The workshop
Figure 1 Site plan, drawing scale 1:25001. The building lot is at the center of a large city block between Briesestraße and Kienitzer Straße in the Rollberg neighborhood of the Neukölln district in Berlin.
2. Verena Lindenmayer, “Urban Social Housing,” guest lecture, Melbourne School of Design, March 7, 2023, https://msd.unimelb. edu.au/events/urbansocial-housing-lecture.
3. Window Flicks was a cultural project and a campaign that aimed to support cinemas in Berlin during the lockdown imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic and create a community experience by projecting movies onto building walls of residential courtyards to be viewed from dwellings.
resulted in the progressive competition brief for the site on Briesestraße, posing questions about future housing standards, changing demographics, community-building, and environmental impact. EM2N, founded by Mathias Müller and Daniel Niggli, working with MAN MADE LAND landscape architects, won the competition, held in 2016. It led to completing the building with 101 dwelling units for STADT UND LAND, one of Berlin’s most prominent social and affordable housing providers, in 2020.
Infill Form
The building lot is at the center of a large city block populated with residential buildings of different scales and types.¹ The design proposal mediates between the existing structures to translate an infill planning strategy into an architectural form. In the public lecture hosted by the Melbourne School of Design on March 7, 2023, Verena Lindenmayer of EM2N presented their design proposal as a form composed of four building volumes positioned in response to the surrounding built context.² In this project, the spaces between the buildings are as important as the buildings themselves. The new and existing buildings work together, creating diverse outdoor spaces that link the new development with the city and ensure adequate daylighting, outlook prospects, and the privacy of individual dwellings.
Outdoor Spaces
To the west, one of the new building volumes is positioned at some distance from an existing residential structure to maintain a pedestrian link cutting transversally through the block. It also creates space for a landscaped area, continuing a green zone stretching through city blocks south of the site and tapping into a sizable public park. This landscaped pedestrian path is the first of three outdoor places defined by the building’s form. The second, which can be observed as an extension of the first one, is created as one of the new building’s volumes is pushed further in, so it stands back-to-back with an existing structure. This formal gesture makes room for a publicly accessible open area as an extension of the sidewalk. A convenience store facing this area contributes to its activation. Units on the ground floor, suitable for small businesses and live-work studios, are accessible from the street to help create active frontages. The ground-level treatment reinforces the building’s relationship to the city and improves the neighborhood’s amenities. The entrance to the underground garage is positioned at the eastern part of the site in Briesestraße to take advantage of the sloping terrain. The third outdoor space is an enclosed courtyard created by three new building volumes and an existing building’s back wall.
This courtyard, combining hard surfaces and landscaped areas, is available to residents only. There are two entrances, from north and south, from where one can take elevators and stairs to access galleries leading to dwellings.
Galleries
Three-meter-wide open-air access galleries are one of the defining features of this project. They have a dual purpose in providing access from the courtyard to individual units and space for private dwellings to expand into. The latter is particularly valuable, as most units in the building are studios or one-bedroom units. Utilizing access galleries as an outdoor extension of dwellings benefits residents’ well-being and health.
Most dwellings have their living areas facing the gallery. Floor-to-ceiling glazing creates a direct link and a visual connection between private living rooms and communal space. Cutouts in the floors of the galleries are strategically positioned next to the building’s facade to protect the intimacy of dwellings and improve daylight intake.
The boundary between communal access routes and private dwelling extensions is marked on the floor of galleries as part of the architectural project to ensure that fire escape routes are not compromised. At the same time, the floor marks prompt residents on how the space can be used or appropriated. The boundary between individual and communal is subtle, and architectural means are only suggestive. Residents were left to decide how to use this additional space and negotiate thresholds. Photos capturing personal items, toys, potted flowers, chairs, tables, and other personal items on access galleries as evidence of domesticity were made by Andrew Alberts six months after residents moved in.
The oversized access galleries create space for interaction between residents. The project rests on the basis that people want to live collectively and desire contact with their next-door neighbors. As galleries overlook the courtyard, poised as a social center of the new development, they also support the relationship between individual dwellings and the entire housing community. Such a spatial configuration, incorporating galleries overlooking the courtyard, was important during socially challenging times imposed by the recent pandemic. As part of the Window Flicks initiative, when local venues were closed, the courtyard of the New Housing on Briesestraße was among Berlin’s residential spaces occasionally turned into open-air cinemas.³ The galleries were an auditorium, and the back wall of an adjacent building was a projection screen, allowing residents to share the feeling of watching a movie together while sitting in front of their dwellings.
Lindenmayer explained that open-air access galleries, commonly used in southern Europe where the climate is more temperate, are also known to be historically used in Germany, giving an example of residential buildings in Dessau designed by Hannes Meyer and the Bauhaus Dessau Architectural Department.⁴,⁵ This access type is often favored in multiunit residential buildings for economic reasons and is employed as a cost-saving measure. However, Lindenmayer emphasized that EM2N’s approach was also driven by spatial qualities related to the transition between indoor and outdoor environments associated with structures such as pergolas, arcades, and arbors. She underlined EM2N’s interest in the social value of access spaces in multiunit residential buildings.⁶
Units
The development has a range of unit types and sizes, assembled into four building volumes. The smallest in size, studios, are in the building’s part facing north. Two-room units are positioned along the western facade, while three-room units occupy the building’s corners. Units for group living, each operating as a cluster of five autonomous dwellings with a shared kitchen and living room, are on all levels above the ground floor, in the building volume overlooking the extension of the sidewalk. More units for group living are in the building’s part on the eastern edge of the lot. These are designed as duplex units to offset limitations imposed by their single orientation. All dwellings, apart from those for group living, have dual orientation, either north-south or west–east, to secure daylight and natural ventilation. Living areas face the gallery, and sleeping rooms are placed toward the street with mature trees and less noise. Eighteen barrier-free dwellings are distributed throughout the building.
Affordability
The choice of open-air access galleries and staircases was driven by an intention to lower the construction cost, but that is not the only design decision contributing to housing affordability. Before the architectural completion was launched, it was first considered if the existing car garage that occupied a part of the lot allocated for development should be demolished to create room for the housing or if the existing structure could be retained and reused to reduce the cost and environmental impact of the new development.⁷ This idea was quickly discarded because the existing structure was unsuitable for efficient space usage, and floor-to-ceiling height was below the minimum required for multiunit housing standards.
Including only a few parking spaces in this development, made possible with the recent relaxation of car parking requirements in Berlin, has contributed to lower construction costs. However, the main savings were made through design decisions. The building structure is made of concrete, deemed the most viable option. Efforts were made to use only the minimum of building material. Load-bearing walls are placed between units, reducing most structural spans to as little as 4 meters, allowing for thinner concrete slabs. There are four staircases and only two elevator shafts in the building. Selecting durable and affordable finishing materials is also part of the same strategy. Linoleum flooring is used in the unit interior. Concrete is exposed in the exterior, on the floor and underside of slabs forming galleries. The building has a plaster facade facing the courtyard and an industrial aluminum-clad one facing the streets
4. Lindenmayer. “Urban Social Housing.”
5. Laubenganghaus, in DessauTörten Settlement, designed by Hannes Meyer and the Bauhaus Dessau Architectural Department in 1929.
6. Lindenmayer. “Urban Social Housing.”
7. Lindenmayer. “Urban Social Housing.”
In conversation
The following section, an edited interview with Verena Lindenmayer, former associate at EM2N and project development lead recorded on April 6, 2023, provides further information from the architects’ perspective.
DS
What design decisions have contributed to reducing the construction cost?
VL To give you the context first, I would like to emphasize that all units are for rental tenure, some are subsidized, and some are rented according to the market price. The requirement for subsidized units in Berlin at the time was 30 percent; it has recently increased to 50 percent. Many affordable providers are struggling as construction costs have increased. At the same time, the demand for affordable housing is enormous. We made many design decisions to reduce the construction cost, affecting space planning, choice of building materials, and construction methods. A strategy of utilizing minimal structural spans illustrates how the three aspects work together in reducing the amount of concrete needed for construction. Building service installations are bundled together. Standardized bathrooms of adjacent units are placed back-to-back for this reason. However, we don’t see cost saving as an obstacle but as a design challenge and a need to be inventive. Our approach employs open-air access galleries to reduce the cost of development and to establish an important communal space. It is not just access but a place where people meet and spend time.
DS How is the role of outdoor spaces relevant to the overall building form?
DS What design decisions do you find most impactful on the relationship between individual and communal?
VL We made a critical decision concerning the dwelling unit layout to have living rooms face access galleries, understanding that privacy is compromised. We have reinforced the link between the private living room and a communal access gallery with floor-to-ceiling windows. We did this contrary to what you will find in many buildings from the 1960s, when open-air galleries were frequent in low-cost housing. Instead of making access to minimal dimensions, we made it a generous size to become an extension of individual dwellings and a place where people can meet.
VL Besides responding to the surroundings, the building form is crafted for gallery access type turned into a shared space. It is also driven by the distribution of dwellings, their orientation, and the need for outdoor areas around the building. As the project developed, we had to fine-tune the building form to balance these aspects. We had a slightly different idea for the competition stage from what was built. We first proposed that the courtyard be open, with a pedestrian thoroughfare connecting two passages that became secured entrances as the project developed. We proposed a communal roof terrace, which was impossible because of budget constraints. In our competition entry, there was no pedestrian link where we now have it along the western edge of the site. Initially, we thought there could be a landscaped area only between our building and the existing one and that units on the ground floor would benefit from more privacy. However, as the design developed, we decided to close the courtyard off to make it for residents only to create a safe environment for children and meet other planning requirements. The outdoor area on the southern side is open to the public, and this space has a different character. The convenience store, located on the ground floor, is run by the residents but is open to the public, too. You can buy coffee and basic things there. We have maintained our initial aims to provide communal areas for residents, such as galleries and the courtyard, and building an actual part of the surrounding Rollberg neighborhood. The outdoor area on the southern side and access to units from the street are important in this regard. There are more communal spaces inside the building, integrated into the dwellings for group living, sometimes called clustered apartments, composed of autonomous units with a shared living room and a kitchen, currently attractive to the young and aging population and single parents.
4
Sample unit layout, drawing scale 1:100
FigureDS How spontaneous is the use of access galleries, and what did you have to do as designers to make the concept work in real life?
VL We insisted on enabling the appropriation of access galleries by residents. It was not easy to do so because of the firefighting regulations, which are very strict in Germany. We had to ensure escape routes were not compromised and put much effort into convincing everyone that the zoning approach we established using different floor finish colors would work. Without residents taking over that space, we would have vast empty spaces. If residents did not actively use galleries, they could become a no-man’s-land, prone to derelict behavior, not unknown in large housing estates. When people moved in, there was some anxiety about what would happen. However, they started bringing chairs and pots outside after a few weeks. I think people are generally happy with the setup whereby other residents are passing by their living rooms. There were some complaints about group visits and tours. On an everyday basis, it works fine. STADT UND LAND, the housing provider who owns and manages the building, has undertaken steps to inform and prepare people applying for tenancy contracts about the specific form of housing the building offers. So, people knew what to expect, and yet there was a significant number of applications. You could say it is down to the demand for affordable housing, but now that the building is used, we can see that people want to live in a community.
“If residents did not actively use galleries, they could become a no-man’s-land, prone to derelict behavior, not unknown in large housing estates. When people moved in, there was some anxiety about what would happen. However, they started bringing chairs and pots outside after a few weeks.”
DS What design decisions did you take to accommodate diverse and changing housing needs?
VL Initially, we assumed that structural columns rather than walls would give more flexibility for the unit layout and a possibility to change over the building life span, estimated to be fifty years according to current standards. However, our client, STADT UND LAND, an affordable housing provider with tremendous experience and an extensive portfolio, saw it more feasible to relocate residents between units when their needs change than to plan to adapt the unit structure or size. They do well in practice to help people replace one larger with two smaller units if needed. In this development, as many as eighty units are small, either studios or one-bedroom units, in response to the demand. It has allowed us to place structural walls at a short distance from each other, resulting in a bookshelf-like structure. There are only a few partitions within dwellings. Units are handed over to residents as generic spaces, with only basic finishes specified by the provider, with electrical and all other installations, but without kitchens. It allows, or necessitates, residents to assert control over their dwelling space. Photos by Andrew Alberts available from our website show a variety of domestic interiors created by residents.
In conversation
The following section is an edited interview recorded with one of the residents on April 23, 2023. They live on the fifth floor with their partner and daughter.
DS
What are the main communal spaces in and around the building, and how are they used?
DB A small outdoor area next to the Kienitzer Straße is an important communal and public space. It is used mainly by residents but is an open public space. We have a convenience store called Späti in our building facing it. These shops are typical for Berlin and can be found in most blocks in the inner city. I would say that they have a social value in the first place. They usually sell tobacco, snacks, drinks, and basic items and are open late into the night and on the weekends. They are often run by the people who live nearby and are spots where locals meet. A group of residents has started running the Späti in our building. I was part of it. But it was not sustainable; we all had too much going on. We therefore reached out to a group that manages cultural activities as we thought it would be important to have such a store to support social
momentum among the residents. Now, that group rents the space from the housing provider who owns and manages the building. Several residents remain involved in running it. It works very well as a gathering spot. It can be rented for events, such as kids’ birthday parties. Cultural events sometimes occur in the outdoor area next to the Kienitzer Straße. Last week, there was a concert by a group helping people with long-term illnesses. Three residential units with floor-toceiling windows face that public space as the shop does. It adds to the character of that space. At the same time, these units have less privacy. For some people, it works. I know someone who lives in one of them and always keeps their door open. For others, it doesn’t. I know that someone has moved out.
Figure 5 Perspective drawing indicating access and communal spaces in the building.DS I expected that you would start with the courtyard. Is it the main communal space?
DB The courtyard is accessible by residents only. It is partially landscaped. Five trees that are growing there are 4 meters tall now. There is also a sand pit. Children mainly use the courtyard. Many playgrounds are around the building, so children have a big choice. I think older kids like to explore the area, and mainly younger children play in the courtyard. Most units overlook the courtyard via access galleries, so parents can keep an eye on them while they are playing. We can hear when parents call children in for dinner. It feels like
having your garden. The space is enclosed by the building on three sides and a fire barrier wall, which amplifies the sound coming from the courtyard, but it has not been much of an issue until now. Once a year, in summer, we have large gatherings in the courtyard with food and everything. These are called summer fests. In the first two years, these events were self-initiated by residents, and last year, it was organized by STADT UND LAND, the housing provider who owns and manages the building.
Figure 6 Perspective drawing indicating structural elements of the building.DS What about the units on the ground floor? Do they benefit from direct access to the courtyard?
DB The courtyard zone, just next to the building, is used by the ground-floor units. There are no fences or anything like that, but the space is appropriated by people who live there. It contributes to keeping that space active. Some units on the ground floor face the public space on one side and the courtyard on the other. Privacy is an issue for some of the residents there. These units are used as ateliers, and many people use them as a workspace.
DS I trust that most of the interaction between residents unfolds on outdoor access galleries encircling the courtyard. How are they used?
DB Walkways or access galleries are halfway between communal and individual. That was the idea behind the project. It was explained to us by STADT UND LAND when we expressed interest in the rental agreement. And it works in practice. It generates random encounters between people. Many residents will have their dinner or glass of wine there in the summer. Some are more casual and may come out in their pajamas, while others may dress up more formally to have dinner there. In winter, galleries are used sparingly. Some areas are decorated for Christmas. But as soon as it gets warmer, galleries go back to life. Yesterday was the first warm day of the year, and it was very nice to see plenty of activity. We can also see children often playing there. Rails are of great help to those learning to walk. A few years older kids find it amusing to run through the galleries.
DS Are there any shared amenities in the building?
DB There is bicycle parking in the courtyard, but other than that, I don’t think we have any shared facilities, such as a communal laundry. I understand the social value of having one. But I think everyone prefers to have their washing machine in their units. All units are equipped with adequate installations. But I think we could use a communal dryer.
DS Most units have living rooms facing openair access galleries with floortoceiling glass doors. Do you feel the intimacy of one’s home is compromised with such an arrangement between individual and communal space?
DB People deal with it differently. I suppose it depends on their preferences. Some residents have mounted folios onto the glass to make it translucent rather than transparent. Most have curtains of different kinds. Some are not fussed with it, and you can see their entire living room as you pass by. Mostly, it is plants that I mentioned before, which are used to provide a bit of a barrier. Some plants are turning into hedge walls for that reason. We have a plant next to the glass door in the interior. But our unit is atypical, as it is on the corner of the building. We do not have a dedicated space in the galleries that we can use. We are often tempted to have breakfast at the access gallery in front of our dwelling when it is sunny. But we have a large private outdoor area facing the street. Most units have both, and you can choose between a private outdoor space facing the street and a less private area facing the courtyard.
DS Do you notice any physical or architectural means that help regulate the relationship between individual and communal use of access galleries?
DB There are marks on the floor to help regulate where residents can place their things. I think there is an informal gardening rivalry in the building, resulting in some spectacular plants growing everywhere. Planting pots and perhaps some furniture or toys are occasionally placed on the other side of the marking line, for which we get prompt notices from the building manager.
7 Perspective drawing of the building envelope.
“I think there is an informal gardening rivalry in the building, resulting in some spectacular plants growing everywhere. Planting pots and perhaps some furniture or toys are occasionally placed on the other side of the marking line, for which we get prompt notices from the building manager. ”
DS
Besides the physical barriers, or their deliberate omission, that you have just described, are there any other regulations or ways of regulating the noise impact?
DB We love regulations in Germany, so there are some guidelines for quiet hours at certain times during the day and night. The noise made by people socializing in the galleries or the sound coming from the courtyard is not an issue. More of a concern is if someone tries to put a painting on the wall in their dwelling. There is a high chance they will have to drill into the concrete, which vibrates throughout the entire building. The first three months were challenging when we moved in and did touch-ups in our units. We have a WhatsApp group for residents, with almost 100 members, where complaints about noise from building work are reported regularly. The same communication is used for neighborly staff, for example, if you need to borrow something, such as a drill, if you are out of flour when shops are closed, or if you need someone to take your delivery if you are not home.
DS Can you describe your unit’s layout and how it fits your needs?
DB We are happy with the unit layout. We have three rooms. My partner and I use one of the rooms as an office. Now that our child is growing up, that room will be used differently, and our home office will shrink to a desk space, probably somewhere in the living room. We are not thinking about changing the layout. However, one of our neighbors with an identical unit is considering splitting the living room into two spaces to create a home office. I also know that in several units for group living, residents have obtained approval from the building owner to reduce their living rooms to create another bedroom, reducing the share of rent met by each habitant. The building owner does provide kitchens on request, but we have built our own. Finishes in the apartment are neutral, white plastered walls and a gray linoleum floor, which we liked, but I know that some residents have covered it with a laminated floor instead.
DS How do you find daylighting and natural ventilation in your unit, and is your dwelling comfortable?
DB Our unit has plenty of daylight on the fifth floor. As our apartment is on the corner of the block and some distance from the adjacent block, we have views down the street and over treetops. Our loggia facing the street is spacious. Big pivoting and tilting glass doors separate the interior from the exterior. When we use these doors in summer, we reshuffle furniture in the living room to move it out of the pivoting path and turn our sofa toward the loggia. Like all other units in the building, our unit has dual orientation, enabling natural ventilation. Windows can be tilted inward for ventilation without creating too much draft. Our bathroom has a ventilation shaft. Most units have bathrooms oriented toward the street. The bathrooms’ dimensions are very generous. I think this has to do with barrier-free access regulations. But it is funny to see tiny units with very large bathrooms. I know that some people keep wardrobes in their bathrooms for that reason.
Iroko Housing, London
Haworth TompkinsIroko Housing, London
Haworth TompkinsYear of completion: 2004
Number of units: 59
Renewed interest and the growing body of research on self-organized housing models suggest another and closer look at the success of Iroko Housing, completed in 2004. The outcomes of this project are valuable for understanding potentials arising from the collaboration between architectural practice and social enterprise. Iroko Housing is part of a large and still ongoing regeneration project in Central London driven by local residents that started more than four decades ago following a set of unique and interconnected actions and circumstances, including: (1) a prolonged grassroots campaign expressing concerns about the deteriorating population and the amenity of the neighborhood; (2) the formation of a social enterprise with a mission to address these concerns; (3) planning authorities’ support for the local
1
Site plan, drawing scale 1:2500
Figure1. Coin Street, “Our Story,” accessed March 5, 2023, https://www.coinstreet. org/about-us/our-story.
2. Andrew Bibby, “Coin Street: Case Study,” accessed May 25, 2023, http://www.andrewbibby. com/socialenterprise/ coin-street.html.
3. Haworth Tompkins, “Neptune Wharf at Fish Island Village, 2022,” accessed May 25, 2023, https:// www.haworthtompkins. com/work/neptunewharf-at-fish-islandvillage.
4. Graham Haworth, “Coin Street Housing: The Architecture of Engagement,” in Sustainable Urban Design: An Environmental Approach, ed. Adam Ritchie and Randall Thomas (New York: Taylor & Francis, 2008), 116–37.
5. Haworth Tompkins, “Iroko Housing, 2004,” accessed May 25, 2023, https:// www.haworthtompkins. com/work/iroko-housing.
groups; (4) the local government’s willingness to sell its land to a not-for-profit organization; and (5) an occurrence of unfavorable economic momentum for commercial development.
There Is Another Way
The completed parts of the regeneration project for the South Bank area near the Waterloo Bridge on the River Thames, besides Iroko Housing, include three more residential developments set up as housing cooperatives; a public park, Bernie Spain Gardens; the riverside walk; underground car parking; and the adaptive reuse of a historical building, Oxo Tower Wharf, which now houses restaurants, exhibition venues, and retail. The development is led by Coin Street Community Builders (CSCB), a not-for-profit organization established to deliver public service objectives, including affordable housing. The organization was formed in the early 1980s off the back of public protests involving local communities who wanted to stay in the area and demanded support from the government to create a livable neighborhood with homes and amenities. Local groups opposed a commercial scheme prioritizing office space and a hotel. They started a campaign under the motto “There Is Another Way” and formulated an alternative strategy for regeneration.¹ The two schemes were under consideration, but after long deliberation and a coinciding economic recession in the UK, planning authorities backed the local initiative. The planners mandated affordable housing as part of the development, reducing the available land’s commercial potential. Finally, in 1984, Greater London Council lent some of the purchase amount and sold 13 acres of its land in the South Bank area to CSCB.²
The Architecture of Engagement
In 1997, with the benefit of experience from the completion of other residential developments in the South Bank area, CSCB organized an invited competition and selected Haworth Tompkins to deliver an architectural project for Iroko Housing. It was one of the pivotal moments for this architectural practice, which has continued working with social housing providers to date. Their design scheme for affordable homes and inclusive communities involving Peabody Trust and other developers, with almost 600 units, was completed last year at Fish Island on the Hertford Union Canal in east London.³
Graham Haworth reflected on the importance of the community’s positive involvement in this project’s planning process. He pointed out that the overall regeneration objectives for the South Bank area, and consequently the brief for Iroko Housing, were established according to the local groups’ needs rather than driven by
the property market and that the involvement of indigenous communities has added the benefit of local knowledge and cultural values to the project.⁴ The architectural intent for Iroko Housing started to take shape during the competition phase based on the input provided by local community groups. Residents of adjacent housing developments were involved and have provided input on the relationship between the building and the street, the creation of the communal courtyard for residents, and the selection of housing typologies suitable for large families. These inputs were central to the architectural definition and the overall built form.
Hollow Square
The architectural intent for Iroko Housing is structured around the provision of the central courtyard, accessible to all residents, and a perimeter defined by the built form. This is read in the floor plan and referred to as a “hollow square” by the architects, who have shaped such a diagram according to the existing street pattern.⁵ The project encompasses the entire city block with sides measuring approximately 100 by 100 meters. The site is separated from a busy public walkway along the River Thames only by a narrow zone of civic and commercial buildings. Three edges of the block are defined with rows of townhouses merged into a single structure. Part of the fourth edge, built a few years later, is the community center, providing services to the entire neighborhood, including a childcare facility and function room with a roof terrace for hire. The community center, too, was designed by Haworth Tompkins, and today, CSCB uses part of the building for its offices. The remaining buildable area along the fourth edge of the block is yet to be utilized. Current plans are for another residential building that would close the block as the original design intent envisaged. The central courtyard is designed to provide amenities and help create a sense of community among residents. It includes play areas for children, and it is partially landscaped. A deep soil area for trees and several large planters are part of it. The vegetation, introduced twenty years ago, makes this inner part of the block appear very green today. This central space can be accessed directly from all townhouses forming the three edges of the block and from the main lobby serving units on the upper floors. It is viewed from dwellings and communal access spaces. The building facade facing the courtyard has floor-to-ceiling openings and is clad in timber, while the brick facade with smaller windows faces the street. The fenestration and use of building materials reflect the difference in the character of the inner communal courtyard and the building’s outer perimeter, forming the public domain.
Underneath the entire block, a basement of a former industrial building is converted into a large publicly accessible car park. A florist shop and a convenience store occupy two corners on the ground floor. Access to these shops and the underground car park is separated from the residential part of the building.
CrossSubsidy
It is important to clarify that the overall regeneration project led by CSCB includes facilities that generate revenue utilized as cross-subsidy for maintaining public spaces and providing affordable housing.⁶ The already mentioned underground car park is leased to one of the leading parking providers in central London. Several spaces across the area, including the florist and convenience store on the ground floor of the building, are rented to retailers, businesses, and restaurants. Some income is generated from advertising billboards. It is a deliberate economic strategy implemented by CSCB to support the running and maintenance of public facilities that tackle social problems, generate change, and improve the community. The role of CSCB was to devise an overall development strategy for the area based on a range of smaller ideas and projects through an incremental implementation of mutually supporting programs, including the improvement of housing conditions. They run infrastructure, organize events, train local communities, and forge links with institutions and local businesses.
Approximately two-thirds of the funding for the Iroko development came from the borrowings made by CSCB and the Coin Street Housing Cooperative formed by it.⁷ The remaining one-third came from government subsidies. The contributions coming from CSCB have enabled better housing quality, reflected in the provision of spacious dwellings and private outdoor areas. The cross-subsidy secured and instrumentalized through social enterprise has contributed to utilizing a terraced house (townhouse) typology and keeping development density in check as preferred by residents.
During his lecture hosted by the Melbourne School of Design on August 24, 2021, Graham Haworth referred to the Victorian terrace at Stanley Crescent Garden in Kensington, on the other side of central London, as a precedent for what both the local community and architects wanted to achieve in this project.⁷ Their aim was to create spacious dwellings suitable for large households, with access to a large communal garden, something rarely associated with affordable and subsidized housing. Today, the cost of freehold for a six-bed terrace house, with period features and access to the communal garden at Stanley Crescent Garden, sells for millions of pounds sterling. Although the Iroko units are not
for sale, as they belong to the housing cooperative, and the difference in real estate market appreciation for the two neighborhoods remains, the current market value of the precedent illustrates what this project has achieved in providing homes for vulnerable and needy groups, including key workers and immigrant families.
Iroko Housing is set up as a cooperative. The building is owned by the housing cooperative, while tenants, as members of the cooperative, have security, pay a fairer rent, and actively participate in the management and maintenance of the building. CSCB runs a training program to help tenants understand and manage their responsibilities.⁸
Units
The project comprises 59 units, including 32 townhouses, 16 duplex units, and 11 flats, all combined into a single structure. Townhouses have three floors. Together, their volumes constitute the base of the overall built form. There are two variants of this dwelling type. Rows of narrower townhouses, measuring 4.2 meters in width, form the eastern and western edges of the site. A row of wider variants, with a 5.2-meter distance between party walls, populates a row of townhouses along the northern side of the site.
The layout is similar in the two variants. The entrance is from the street via a small recess, providing an interface with the public domain and storage for utilities, including electricity and gas meters and bins. The entrance lobby, kitchen, and living room are on the ground floor. Private gardens are at the back and have direct access to the communal courtyard. On level one, a pair of rooms face opposite facades. They can be used as additional living spaces or bedrooms. Three more bedrooms are on level three. All rooms facing the inner side of the block have a narrow balcony accessed through double glass doors. The narrower townhouse variants have an additional room on level four and access to a private roof terrace. Duplex units are placed on top of townhouses along the northern edge and accessed via a communal access gallery on the inner side of the block. Their kitchens and living rooms are on the lower level, while two bedrooms are on the upper level. Stairs are positioned along the access gallery to protect the dwelling’s privacy. The access gallery is 2.4 meters wide and serves as a front yard where residents interact and can keep their plants and outdoor furniture. Eight smaller apartments in the two corners of the building, just above retail units, on levels one and two, add diversity to the mix of dwellings. These one- and two-bedroom units are predominantly oriented toward the street and are accessed by the stairs. Three more atypical units can be found in the part of the building closest to the community center.
6. Coin Street, “Our Story.” 7. Graham Haworth, “Iroko Housing,” guest lecture, Melbourne School of Design, August 24, 2021, https://edsc.unimelb.edu. au/studio-epsilon/lecturerepository/haworth-tomp kins.
8. Coin Street, “Iroko Housing Co-op,” accessed May 25, 2023, https:// www.coinstreet.org/aboutus/our-developments/ iroko-housing-co-op.
In conversation
The following segment, an edited interview with Graham Haworth recorded on June 27, 2023, provides further information about the project from the architect’s perspective.
DS
What are the main reasons for employing a “hollow square” diagram in this project?
GH It had something to do with the scale and location of the site. We explored various configurations before we settled for the hollow square option. That form gave us a balance between the intimacy of dwellings and the presence of the building in the inner city. We worked with two architectural expressions, a hard urban edge on the outside and a soft or organic inside where we have planting and landscape. The hollow square configuration also allowed us to reconcile two scales, one of the dwellings and the other of the city.
DS What was the involvement of local representatives and their role in the design process?
GH Residents from the adjacent buildings that formed part of CSCB were powerful voices in judging the competition. They were right in there from the beginning. And then, after the competition, they stayed involved in the interim reviews right up to planning. CSCB developed a project brief, and their input was instrumental in settling for the townhouse typology. By then, they had already completed three other housing projects, and we benefited from their experience. Mulberry Housing, a low-key project, is immediately east of our site. On Broadwall Street, closer to Oxo Tower Wharf, is a row of elegant townhouses designed by Lifschutz Davidson Architects.⁹ CSCB had tenant representatives from those two housing cooperatives involved in the design process for Iroko Housing. As I said, they were part of the interview panel and workgroup we regularly met. We had a series of workshops with them throughout the competition stage and after during the project development.
DS The two main communal spaces are the central courtyard and the gallery, providing access to the duplex units located on the upper levels. Could you tell us more about their roles and relationship to the built form?
GH Communal courtyards are often associated with apartment buildings. Usually, units are accessed via galleries, which are part of the courtyard on the inner side of the block. However, our architectural proposition employed townhouse typology, where you go from the street through a dwelling to access a communal garden. We used townhouses to establish the block’s perimeter. In the north wing toward the National Theatre, we placed a row of duplex units that we call “maisonettes” on top of the townhouses. We have created a communal access gallery reached by an elevator and stairs in the middle of that wing. Only a limited number of residents use the access gallery. It has helped create a smaller community within the community, which has positively appropriated this space. All townhouses and maisonettes are looking into the courtyard, adding passive surveillance, and the idea was that the central space would help create a sense of community. The brief included the sunken ball game area, children’s play area with climbing frames, and seating areas. We initially had ideas that everybody could wander through and use that space. We thought workers from adjacent office buildings would come and have lunch there, but the client group representatives were dead against it for lots of different reasons, and in the end, we settled on a closed private courtyard.
9. Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands, “Broadwall Housing,” accessed May 25, 2023, https:// lds-uk.com/projects/ residential/broadwallhousing/.
DS
What input did local representatives provide during the design process, and how did it affect the architectural project?
GH To illustrate, we had proposed that the community building would be placed along Upper Ground Street, closer to the National Theatre, thinking the two facilities could relate in some way. Their feedback was to place it on the opposite end of the site, along the busier Stanford Street, to shield dwellings from the noise. I already mentioned our debate about the courtyard. They supported the idea of the communal courtyard, but we had much discussion on the character of that space. How does the privacy gradient work if it should be public, permeable, or private? We received good input about dwelling units, too. For example, the recessed entries were debated during the competition stage. They asked practical questions, such as where can we put our fruits and vegetables? Where do we put our trainers? Where do we put our bicycles? In response to those inquiries, we created a secured lobby facing the street in each unit. We also discussed the relationship between private gardens and the communal courtyard, and the outcome was the fences that you can see today. Interestingly, I took a group of Dutch architects to see the building approximately five years after its completion, and they could not fathom the idea of fences and private gardens. They would have preferred a low wall and openness between the private dwellings and the communal courtyard. A little private garden is a British thing, so it was important to close that space off as representatives of the resident community requested. They wanted privacy, a safe environment for young children, and room for productive gardens.
DS Did you have much interaction with residents after they moved in?
GH I think the only place where the involvement or residents tailed off is post-occupancy evaluation. It wasn’t easy to stay involved and continue monitoring once the building was handed over. It is always good to know whether the things you have designed are working. The building industry has moved on, and post-occupancy evaluation procedures are much more structured in more recent projects. We would have preferred more feedback for Iroko Housing. We received a call from them after the Grenfell Tower tragedy. The housing cooperative was concerned, and we had to reconnect to clarify that the timber cladding on the inner facades was not an issue. The building is not a high-rise, and it has a concrete structure. Overall, I think that the building is aging well. The maintenance thus far has been minimal. Hardwood on the courtyard facade proved resilient and required only cleaning for some dirt staining, as the wall acts as a splashback to outdoor walkways.
“We have created a communal access gallery reached by an elevator and stairs in the middle of that wing. Only a limited number of residents use the access gallery. It has helped create a smaller community within the community, which has positively appropriated this space. All townhouses and maisonettes are looking into the courtyard, adding passive surveillance, and the idea was that the central space would help create a sense of community.”
DS This project was designed and built just before environmental awareness and requirements started to pick up in the construction industry. What were the main provisions in this regard?
GH It is true that environmental objectives have become much more onerous in the meantime, but environmental implications were always high on our agenda. We are interested in the performance of our buildings and often take steps to understand the environmental impact of their operation. Iroko Housing units are equipped with individual heat recovery plants. Initially, those plants were not appropriately used, and CSCB has provided some training. Residents did not have the benefit of soft landings, which are much more prevalent today. The building has solar panels and relies on natural ventilation as all units are dually oriented.
DS
Some of the Iroko dwellings have up to five bedrooms, as they were designed for families according to the input from the Council and local groups involved in the design process. Was there a projection that households would grow or shrink?
GH The development was planned for 360 occupants. At first, 260 people were living there. When Lambeth London Borough Council and CSCB offered homes to people on the housing registrar, they made the allowance for population growth. It was expected that families would grow and that there would be more children. However, five years into the building’s use, the number of residents remained roughly the same. I suppose that some children become young adults, that there must have been some family separations, and that, after all, there were not as many children as projected because we know that the number of children decreased from 114 to 65 according to the same census.
DS This project provides homes for vulnerable and needy groups, including key workers and immigrant families, yet the units are of the highest spatial standards. I understand this is in part made possible through crosssubsidies provided by CSCB. Was there a pressure to design and build higher density at the time?
GH At that time, Iroko Housing was considered a good-density project. Its density is measured at 79 units per hectare. Today, our practice is looking into schemes with as many as 500 units per hectare. But even according to older standards, the project was against the market. The funding stream from the government was important, but even more, the autonomy of the housing group, who were able to set their own space standards because of their own funding channels. I think the chances of something like that happening again are remote. Today, we would probably be looking to add several more floors to a project of a similar kind to maintain viability.
DS Could you apply the knowledge developed in this project to other residential buildings you have designed?
GH Quite a lot of it. I would say establishing a scale of the community in the first place. The way we have clustered units around the access gallery to form a smaller community and the way we have helped create a larger community around the communal courtyard is something we have applied in a much larger project in East London. The knowledge transfer also includes utilizing duplex and triplex units and gallery access to provide natural light to units. It is helpful in meeting housing design standards that have become more stringent regarding the orientation of dwellings. Also, the attention to the landscape is relevant. And most important, identifying key stakeholders and consulting communities during the planning process.
DS Did the project address the spatial adaptability of dwellings?
GH In this project, spatial adaptability is inherent to the size of units. They are a bit like Victorian terraced houses, which are known for their flexibility in the vertical sense rather than horizontal. Depending on the household size, occupants can decide whether to have rooms on level one as a secondary living space or as bedrooms. The additional room with access to the private roof terrace, found in the narrower variant of townhouses, is suitable for working from home. At the time we designed the building, not much emphasis was given to working from home, and we didn’t necessarily plan for it, but I think it comes in very handy today.
5 Perspective drawing indicating access and communal spaces.
6 Perspective drawing indicating structural elements of the building.
FigureIn conversation
The following section is an edited interview recorded on August 9, 2023, with a local resident and Group Director at Coin Street Community Builders (CSCB), Iain Tuckett.
DS
We have tried speaking to architects and residents for each project in this book. We have an architects’ perspective on Iroko Housing. We would like to know more about the links between the architectural project and social enterprise.
IT Iroko was our fourth housing cooperative, part of the regeneration project for the South Bank area. Our board, which runs the CSCB organization and oversees projects, includes local residents, some of whom are members of housing cooperatives. We always wanted to involve people, and anyone local could come. Our organization is set as a trust, and we have a group for housing, a group for commercial, and another one for outdoor spaces. In short, the Iroko housing development was led by local residents and the CSCB organization.
DS Is an invited architectural design competition an adequate mechanism for involving local representatives in the design process?
IT We relied on consultations when developing our first housing cooperative, which served as a next-door example we mentioned previously. In that project, the housing group met regularly with architects, which was a bit of a disaster. What happened was that architects would present to this group of people with little housing knowledge other than the experience we all have living somewhere. We think we know about housing, but most don’t have the experience of developing housing. The architect would present three options. The bit silly option, the one that was like, okay. And one that they wanted, and you know it. It’s very easy. I’m not saying to manipulate but to bring people along with you. I remember when we were choosing the brick, and there were exactly even numbers as to which brick color and type to use. And so, the person who abstained was sent out on a taxi to look at some housing done with that brick. Still, that person couldn’t decide. Finally, the taxi driver took the decision. Therefore, you know, that process hadn’t really worked. This is why we introduced architectural competitions overseen by local residents, including myself. It does not exclude consultations— especially when you go for planning, when local communities must be brought along.
DS What mechanisms did you use to work with architects in the development process?
IT
It’s probably important to understand that we held an architectural design competition. We have done this quite often, so we got it down to a nice art. The first thing is the rough brief. We wanted family housing, and we also wanted to build a neighborhood center that was to come later. The Council was very keen to accommodate large households. We settled for five-bedroom units suitable for families of eight and a mix of smaller units and flats. We engaged a quantity surveyor very early on to give us a rough cost based on the brief. We knew having them on your side was essential, and we let architects appoint other consultants. We interviewed eight architects. They presented design approaches. And based on that, we selected four. Those four all came together. We spent a day looking at the site and responding to their questions. We had an example next door, a housing scheme built in 1988. In that scheme, you go through your back door, you get into your private garden, you go through it, and you get into a communal garden. Such a housing concept can be found across London. But dwellings like that are pretty large and occupied by wealthy people. We did not see why social housing shouldn’t be just as good. Each architect worked with the construction quantity surveyor company we had appointed because we didn’t want schemes that were way out of the set budget. Halfway through, each of the teams presented where they were at, and we gave feedback. One scheme did not work for us, but the other three were very good. We were surprised by how many units all teams managed to get on. We selected Haworth Tompkins. Following our feedback, they placed the neighborhood center against the busier road and positioned housing on the other three sides of the block. I think it’s an excellent scheme. It weathers well, too.
“I remember when we were choosing the brick, and there were exactly even numbers as to which brick color and type to use. And so, the person who abstained was sent out on a taxi to look at some housing done with that brick. Still, that person couldn’t decide. Finally, the taxi driver took the decision. Therefore, you know, that process hadn’t really worked.”
Figure 7 Perspective drawing of the building envelope.DS Can you tell me more about how crosssubsidies work?
DS You mentioned the Council wanted large units, and CSCB, too, wanted and succeeded in achieving specific spatial standards, which are rare in subsidized housing today.
IT We wanted construction to pay for itself. That was not possible with Iroko. We built into the brief spatial requirements exceeding government standards, which are now abolished as they do. We set environmental standards to include solar water heating and heat exchange systems. We applied for a housing grant from the government, but it had a ceiling, and anything else you had to borrow. We also knew that if we borrowed as much as it took, the rents over the many years you calculate would have been too high. So, we decided to cross-subsidize it using CSCB commercial income.
IT The public car park underneath the building effectively covers the cost of groundwork and foundations for the Iroko building. We did not have the money in our back pocket, but CSCB had the ability to borrow because of the commercial activity it undertakes. That borrowing has been recently paid off. It was great as it was. It enabled the provision of private gardens on the ground level, roof terraces, and additional rooms on the east and west wings, from where you could look out your windows and see Tate Modern.
DS I understand that the organization’s commercial activity and capacity to engage with the public domain, rather than maintaining a narrow focus on housing affordability, was essential to improving housing conditions.
IT We have set up a registered housing association called Coin Street Secondary (CSS) housing cooperative, which has long-term leases from CSCB for the land for housing developments and receives public grants. It allows CSCB to focus on the public realm, the commercial side, and that sort of stuff, and CSS to focus on housing. Iroko is one of its primary housing cooperatives. CSCB provides the cross-subsidies we mentioned. CSS is responsible for the loan and cyclical maintenance, including external bits of the building and lifts. Maintenance of dwellings and communal areas is the responsibility of Iroko as a primary housing cooperative. They also look after allocations and management themselves. Each of the four cooperatives is slightly different.
DS Is the development scale critical for the ability to crosssubsidize housing and, the other way around, for housing to subsidize public amenities?
IT In fact, on the adjacent site, just south of the National Theatre, we are doing a major scheme that involves quite a lot of private housing to fund the public swimming and indoor leisure center, which was needed because we brought a lot of people into this area. Traditionally, local authorities used to provide communal facilities. Doesn’t happen. They don’t even manage to get developers of really big schemes to contribute substantially to public amenities. In this area on the South Bank, we work with Lambeth Council. We do our stretch for the riverside and Bernie Spain Gardens. We were involved in setting up the Jubilee Gardens trust.
DS Why is it rare to see grassroots initiatives turned into projects for neighborhood regeneration and housing development, such as this one led by CSCB?
IT The grants have been reduced since we started doing housing cooperatives. The government essentially made housing associations build private housing for sale to subsidize social housing. They’ve done the same to local authorities; they don’t get the old rate support from the government and have to rely on other means. A target for new developments in London is that half of it should be open-market housing. And there is reliance on a shared ownership model. Housing has become extraordinarily expensive in this area.
DS To conclude, what are your views on the potential of selforganized, local community groups in housing provision?
IT We use the term community anchors, and that’s a term that’s been used for quite a time for organizations that are based in the neighborhood and support other groups and have links with local authorities and regional government. We have invested enormous amounts of time in getting the government to adopt a social enterprise strategy. We showed that we can go a long way if communities can bid for land and if there’s government money around to help. I believe in redesigning the State from the neighborhood upward and that governments can help bring different people together to try and find a way through problem areas.